“…His in-law Ukraintsev's large brick house survives until this very day on the Khokhlovskii pereulok in Moscow (see Iurkin,Andrei,194,illustration 11). It appears that toward the end of his life Vinius lived on the ulitsa Sretenka; by then, he also owned a house outside the city gates and had a residence on one of his estates, both of which were properties he acquired after 1689 (Iurkin,Andrei,340,442, venture; he did not serve as the interpreter-translator for the group at Dedinovo, where the ship was actually built (see Iurkin,Andrei,[88][89][90][91]359;Boterbloem,Fiction and Reality,[69][70]Dopolneniia,vol. 5,220,228).…”